sovay: (Claude Rains)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2013-11-16 08:48 pm

Bite me, but not too gently

Armed with a carton of goat's milk, some discs of Taza chocolate left over from the Halloween party, and the fact that Dave's Fresh Pasta sells Fat Toad Farm goat's milk caramel, I have made myself goat's milk salt caramel hot chocolate.

Dinner was an experiment from Amsterdam Falafelshop on Elm Street. I'd bought salad items from them, but never actually their falafel. It's delicious. Crunchy on the outside without being tooth-breaking, fragrant chickpea goodness inside. I got three in a bowl (I wasn't sure how a pita pocket would travel) and piled baba ghanoush, hummus, pickled turnips, and garlic-fried eggplant around them; the cost came to less than most sandwiches and it was an entire dinner as far as I'm concerned. Their garlic cream sauce is indispensable. I forgot to try the tahini. Next time. There'll be a next time. Possibly very soon.

I am going to drink my hot chocolate and rewatch Stephen Frears' The Hit (1984), which has John Hurt being morally ambiguous. Of such things are evenings made.
yhlee: Fall-From-Grace from Planescape: Torment (PST FFG (art: maga))

[personal profile] yhlee 2013-11-17 02:37 am (UTC)(link)
I think the goat's milk caramel I had was a different one, but it was so spectacular that I'm almost afraid to ever have it again because I could not stop eating the damn things and I should get my nutrients from something other than caramel. :-)

Have a lovely evening!
yhlee: Korean tomb art from Silla Dynasty: the Heavenly Horse (Cheonmachong). (Korea cheonmachong)

[personal profile] yhlee 2013-11-17 12:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Aha, I had mine from Big Picture Farm. I enjoy a universe in which there are multiple goat milk caramel options.

My mom has always thought me odd for liking Korean cold noodles (naengmyeon, it literally means cold noodles), which are buckwheat noodles (I think) served in beef? broth and flavored with vinegar and mustard and garnished with a bit of beef, gimchi, cucumbers, half a boiled egg, and some sliced Asian pear. I would eat it in the winter because that was when I was home from college on winter break, and the Korean restaurant people would look at me oddly, but bring it to me anyway. It's normally, as you might imagine, a summer dish. :-)